They excelled in fields dominated by men.
they excelled in fields dominated by men
they excelled in fields dominated by men
The only similarity was that they were both women trying to succeed in what were essentially men's professions.
They both excelled in male-dominated professions
They both excelled in male-dominated professions.
Good question. They met a few times, but were not romanitically involved. Lindbergh had a sick ( old Army Game) appetite for practical jokes, and he pulled one involving dousing her with water ( from the Pacific, sorry !) as some sort of joke about an Ocean Hop. They were certainly not Romantioally inclined. Lindbergh"s wife lived until quite recent times. ( Anne Morrow Lindbergh)/
The only similarity was that they were both women trying to succeed in what were essentially men's professions.
They both excelled in male-dominated professions
Excelled in male dominated fields
they excelled in fields dominated by men
The only similarity was that they were both women trying to succeed in what were essentially men's professions.
Journalisms
journalism
Anne O'Hare McCormick and Amelia Earhart were both trailblazing American women in their respective fields: McCormick was a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who became the first woman to head the foreign news desk at The New York Times, while Earhart was a pioneering aviator who set numerous flying records, including being the first female pilot to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean. Both women defied societal norms of their time and achieved remarkable success in male-dominated industries.
They both excelled in male-dominated professions
They excelled in fields dominated by men.
They both excelled in male-dominated professions.
No but you could get a picture in a book called "Amelia Earhart" by Carol Anne Pearce